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Drew Pinsky doesn't sound like he's on the front lines of the culture
wars. Of course, maybe that's because of what he's usually talking
about: dating, drugs, STDs, abuse, addiction, relationships — and
above all, sex.
In his 17 years
as the co-host of Loveline, a late-night call-in show syndicated
to over 70 radio stations nationally, Pinsky has dealt with just
about every bizarre sexual question imaginable. By day a medical
director at a Pasadena hospital, Pinsky sits down five nights a
week — alongside co-host Adam Carolla, a wisecracking former member
of the L.A. comedy group The Groundlings — to field dozens
of calls from insecure teens and twentysomethings. When Loveline
was adapted into an MTV show five years ago, it vaulted "Dr.
Drew" to national fame, and transformed the soft-spoken, middle-aged
California physician into the sex-ed. spokesman for a generation.
He wrote a book with Carolla (The Dr. Drew and Adam Book: A Survival
Guide to Life and Love), launched a health-advice website (Drdrew.com),
nabbed a USA Weekend column ("Ask Dr. Drew"), and
began doing guest spots on all manner of TV shows, from The View
to Hardball.
With fewer
and fewer teens looking to parents for advice on sex, the "Dr.
Drew" phenomenon comes as no surprise: A mature radio voice,
offering comfort and sanity, makes for an attractive alternative
to parental confrontation. What's surprising, though, is that despite
his pop-culture celebrity, Pinsky's views represent an ideology
that fits anything but MTV.
Though a supporter
of several birth-control and contraceptive methods, Pinsky has championed
abstinence as the "best choice for teenagers' emotional and
physical health." He emphatically condemns drug abuse, and
describes himself as anti-abortion: "I absolutely believe that
life begins at conception. That's something that exists with absolute
clarity, a line in the sand. There's no one who can argue about
the beginning of human life."
In an ABC
News profile two years ago, Pinsky and his show were described
as the "stealth messengers of abstinence and family values"
— a label he wholeheartedly accepts.
"Stealth
is the name of the game," says Pinsky. "I remember when
we sat down to put together Drdrew.com, I kept telling the staffers:
think stealth, not just health. It's been that way all along. .
. . You can't just try to scare young people into making the right
choice. You have to answer their questions with abject honesty."
Though Pinsky
frames the issue in terms of health, not ideology — he worries that
if he made blatantly political statements, "they'd jump all
over me" — the crux of his message is an avowedly pro-family
one.
"It's
pretty clear to me, based on anecdotal evidence, that there's a
population improving in this country. . . . And then there's everyone
else, who continue on this downward spiral — this cycle of abuse,
fractured families, and teen pregnancy," says Pinsky. "The
biggest danger for children and teens today, without a doubt, is
surviving the broken home."
This was Pinsky's
message to teen viewers, every week on MTV, for four years. With
guest celebrities, audience participation, and juvenile entertainment
from Carolla, Loveline's TV format resembled a late-night
talk show — albeit one with call-ins that might equally have been
heard on the "quiz" section of Howard Stern.
"MTV never
really appreciated the stealth message of our show," says Pinsky.
"They only appreciated the salacious details. We were the ugly
stepchild, and they always wanted to get rid of us. But it was too
popular, so they couldn't."
The MTV context
could be raunchy, but Pinsky provided a dose of maturity notably
absent from the channel's other 23-and-a-half hours of programming.
And now, with the TV stint done, Pinsky feels he has more freedom
to discuss his beliefs — both on the radio and in public. He recently
visited Washington, D.C., to help unveil a study conducted by the
Institute for American Values at the behest of the Independent Women's
Forum.
Dubbed "Hooking
Up, Hanging Out, and Hoping for Mr. Right — College Women on Dating
and Mating Today," the comprehensive national survey found
that 83 percent of college women said marriage was one of their
"important goals." Another 63 percent said they'd "like
to meet [their] future husband in college."
Despite these
goals, however, many women — over 40 percent — said they'd experienced
a "hook up" (a slang definition that covers everything
from kissing to sex) outside of a relationship, and one in ten women
reported having done so more than six times. Pinsky also describes
himself as an enormous fan of author Wendy Shalit, whose Return
to Modesty: Discovering the Lost Virtue stirred up controversy
when it was published in 1999. Shalit blamed the hook-up culture
on the failure to properly socialize young men and women: "In
the age of the hook-up, young women confess their romantic hopes
in hushed tones, as if harboring some terrible secret."
"[The
study] completely backs up what I've seen all across the country,
on college campuses, at speeches and in the office," said Pinsky.
"I see women every day who've gone out and done these sort
of things, been free and loose and acted how pop culture tells them
to act. They're left unsatisfied, with the painful knowledge that,
according to what the culture says, they should be happy — and they
aren't happy at all."
Pinsky is unconcerned
about the risks of taking such a public stand: By framing the issues
in terms of "health," rather than making a moral judgement,
his comments could well pass under the radar of the feminist cognoscenti.
While Pinsky is hardly an across-the-board conservative — he favors
certain forms of the "morning-after" pill — his message
of abstinence, responsibility, and a mature attitude toward relationships
stands directly opposed to MTV and its pop-culture progeny. Given
his stature among the MTV generation, Pinsky's remarks on sex are
likely to fire from the ideologues seeking to couch it all in terms
of "liberation." Uninterested in debate or in civic conversation,
the academics and feminists may find him a ripe target for attack.
Pinsky's advantage,
though, lies not in his celebrity, but in the solid nature of his
reputation — and his deep understanding of how teens truly think.
So long as he continues to defend reason and responsibility against
extremism and hysteria, Pinsky can win the argument — and, more
importantly, win over the hearts and minds of today's youth.
In any case,
Pinsky's opposition to the modern sexual scene is no longer under
wraps. As he wrote last year in USA Weekend: "It's clear
to me that the generation that came of age in the 1960s had a notion
of sexual equality that was poorly thought out. It seems to have
been conceived by and for seventeen-year-old boys. Men think, 'This
is great!' And all women find from [the current sexual scene] is
disillusionment.
"We've
been forced to operate under the false assumption that men and women
are the same and should behave the same. . . . But people today
live in a different world. They've never had to repress their sexuality.
They're free with their sexual vocabulary and the range of behaviors
they feel comfortable exploring. The problem is, they still don't
understand the consequences."
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